.TH LEVEE 1 "29 August 1998" "Mastodon Linux"
.SH NAME
.B levee
\-
A Screen Oriented Editor.
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B vi, levee
[\fI+address\fR] [\fIfile \fB...\fR]
.SH DESCRIPTION
Levee is a screen oriented  editor based on the  Unix editor
"vi".  It provides a terse,  powerful way to enter and edit text.
(However,  if you want a word-processor,  you're better off with
WordStar.)

Levee is a moded editor.  It operates in 3 modes  -- visual,
command, and insert.  Most of the editing work is done is visual
mode,  file reading and  writing is  done in  command mode,  and
insert mode does what you would expect.
.PP
When you enter Levee,  you may specify  an  address to start
editing at.  These addresses  are in the same  format as command
mode addresses,  except that a naked + will put  you at the very
end of the file.
.PP
Levee is copyright (c) 1982-2015 by David L. Parsons. (See
the notice at the end of this document for distribution terms.)

.SH "COMMAND MODE COMMANDS"

These commands are used for  editing new files,  writing
modified files,  changing options, doing substitutions,  and
a subset of  the visual commands.  They take as  input whole
lines,  terminated  by  return (to execute),  or  escape (to
abort.)
     
Command mode is reached by typing ":" or "Q" from visual
mode.  If you enter command  mode by typing ":",  Levee will
execute  one  command,   then return  to  visual  mode after
prompting you  with  "[more]".   If you type anything except
a space or return, Levee will accept another command, and so
forth.  If,  however, you enter command mode via "Q",  Levee
will  remain in  command mode  until  you enter the "visual"
command.


.SS "A NOTE ON COMMAND SYNTAX"
.PP
A command may be preceded by an optional line-range.  If
you do not provide a line-range,  Levee will use the default
line-range shown by the command.  A line-range is one or two
address specifications in the following format:

.RS
(\fB.\fR|\fB$\fR|\fB'x\fR|\fB#\fR) [ (\fB+\fR|\fB-\fR) (\fB/\fIpatt\fB\fB/\fR|\fB?\fIpatt\fB?\fR|\fB#\fR) ]
.TP
.B \.
current line.
.TP
.B $
last line.
.TP
.B 'x
the line with mark x on it.
.TP
.B #
line #.
.RE

.PP
For example, ".-5,.+5p" will print every line within ten
lines of the current line.  "$-5" is the fifth line from the
end of the file,  and "/end/+2"  is the second line past the
next  occurrence  of  the  pattern "end".  Patterns  may  be
regular expressions (see below.)

Also,  a naked line-range will  set the current  line to
the first line in the range  and print all the lines in that
range. "1,10" sets the current line to 1,  then prints lines
1 to 10.

If you specify a non-existent line in a range, the command
 will abort and Levee will tell you "bad address".

.SS "Command mode commands"

.TP
.B    args
Show the current argument list, if one exists. The file that you
are currently editing will be framed by '[' and ']'.

.TP
.IB    (.,.) change
Delete lines, then enter insert mode.

.TP
.IB    (.,.) delete
Delete lines. Deleted lines are stored in a Yank Buffer for
later putback with "put".

.TP
.B    "edit[!] [file]"
Discard the current file and start editing a new one. If
changes were made to the current file, you must enter "edit!"
to force Levee to discard the changes. If you do not specify
a filename, Levee will try to reedit the current filename.

When Levee reads in a new file, it will tell you how many
bytes it read in, or [overflow] if the file is larger than the
internal buffer (256000 bytes on most platforms; 20k on USCD
Pascal.)

.TP
.B    execmode
Remain in command mode until you use the "visual" command.

.TP
.BI    file [name]
Echo what the current filename is, its status, and the current
line. If you provide it with a name, it will change the filename
to that.

.TP
.IB (.) insert
Insert text above the current line. If you specify a line number,
Levee will make that the current line, then insert above it.

.RS
.SS "Insert mode commands"
.TP
.B ^W
Back over the last word you entered.
.TP
.B ^H
Back over one character.
.TP
.B ^U
Back over all input on this line.
.TP
.B ^V
Escape the next character typed. (For example,
.B ^V^H
will put a ^H into the file.)
.TP
.B ESC
Exit insert mode.
.TP
.B ^D
If at start of line, reduce indentation 'shiftwidth' columns.
.TP
.B ^T
If at start of line, increase indentation 'shiftwidth' columns.
.RE

.PP

When in insert mode, Levee will not allow you to enter any control
characters except return and tab.  Return ends input on this line and
opens a new line for input.

.TP
.BI    map[!] [key [text]]
Define/list macros.  There are 3 forms of map:
.TP
.I map.
This lists all the active macros.
.TP
.IR map (key).
This shows the macro associated with (key), if any.
.TP
.IR map "(key) (text)"
This maps (key) to (text). You may map any
key except ":" and escape. In the normal
form (map), the macro will be effective
in visual mode, but in the alternate form,
(map!), the macro will be effective in
insert and command modes.

.PP
For example, if you map!ped return to "hello world", every time
you entered a return in command or visual mode, the string "hello
world" would pop up.

.TP
.BI    next [file ...]
Edit the next file in the arglist, or edit a new arglist. Levee
takes its initial arglist off the command line when you execute it.
If "autowrite" is set, Levee will write out the changes to the
current file before editing the next one.

.TP
.IB    (.) open
Insert below the current line. Otherwise just like insert.

.TP
.B    previous
Edit the previous file in the arglist. Otherwise, like next.

.TP
.IB    (.,.) print
Display lines without changing the current line.

.TP
.IB    (.) put
Put the contents of the yank buffer back on the line below
the current line. If you specify a line, it resets the current
line, then puts the yank buffer back. The yank buffer is filled
by the delete, change, or yank commands. Put does not destroy
the yank buffer, so you may put back text multiple times.

.TP
.B    quit[!]
Exit Levee. If you want to discard changes, use "quit!"

.TP
.IB    (.) read [file]
Put the contents of 'file' after the current line.

.TP
.BI    rm file
Delete 'file' from disk.

.TP
.BI    set [option=value]
Set a tunable variable. Levee has a dozen or so user-definable
variables which you can twiddle via this command. There are boolean,
integer, and string variables that you can set. A string or integer
variable is set by 'set xxx=yyy', a boolean variable is set via
\'set xxx' or 'set noxxx'.

Here are the settable variables (and abbreviations):
.TP
.BI tabsize (ts)
tab stop
.TP
.BI shiftwidth (sw)
columns to shift on ^D, ^T, >>, or <<
.TP
.B scroll
number of lines to scroll on ^D, ^U
.TP
.BI autoindent (ai)
Supply indentation during insert mode.
.TP
.BI autowrite (aw)
Write out changes before :next, :prev.
.TP
.BI autocopy (ac)
Make backup copies before writing changes.
.TP
.B list
Display tabs as ^I, end of line as $.
.TP
.B magic
Use regular expressions in searches.
.TP
.B suffix
If the filename does not have a . in
it, supply the suffix. (This is the
only string variable.)
.TP
.BI overwrite (ow)
Destroy old file first, then write.
.TP
.BI beautify (be)
When set, Levee will not allow insert
of any control character except tab
and return unless you escape it with
ctrl-V.
.TP
.B wrapscan
Searches wrap around end of buffer.
.TP
.BI ignorecase (ic)
Ignore the case of alphabetic characters
during searches.
.TP
.B "mapslash"
(ST version only) Map '/' in filenames to
'\\'.  If the environment contains `mapslash'
when levee is called, this variable will
default to true, otherwise it defaults to
false. (See the documentation for the
Teeny-shell on how the teeny-shell interprets
`mapslash')
.TP
.BI lines (li)
(ST version only) How many lines on the display.
This is primarily for running levee through
the serial port - put set li=xx into your
LVRC for a xx line terminal.
.TP
.BI cols (co)
(ST version only) How many columns on the
display.  Like the lines variable, it's for
running levee through the serial port.

.PP
You may set multiple variables on one line, as in 'set ws noai'.
To see the current settings of these variables, :set -- without any
arguments -- will show the current settings.

At startup, Levee looks in the environment variable LVRC for
a list of variables to set (GEMDOS/MS-DOS). LVRC is one line
of the form 'option=value ...'. If you have a LVRC defined that
is 'ts=4 ow nows', Levee will set tabsize to 4, turn on overwrite,
and turn off wrapscan.

If you are using RMX, Levee looks in the file ":home:r?lvrc"
for initialization. If you are using Osy/SWOs, Levee looks in the
file "*.lvrc". The format of these files are different from the
LVRC variable -- see "source" for more information.

.TP
.BI source file
Take command mode commands from 'file'. These commands can be
any legal command, except "visual". If a error happens during
execution of 'file', Levee abandons that level of source'ing.

In Osy/SWOs, there are a few differences in insert mode from
within a sourced file. No character has special meaning except a
line  containing nothing but a period, which terminates insert mode.
For example:

.RS
:commands
.br
.
.br
.
.br
:insert
.br
blah blah blah blah blah blah
.br
blah blah blah blah blah blah
.br
blah blah blah blah blah blah
.br
.
.br
:more commands
.RE

If you are running Levee under any other operating system,
you cannot do a insert from a :source file.

.TP
.B (.,.)substitute(delim)patt(delim)repl(delim)[qcpg]
.TP
.B (.,.)substitute&

Search for patt and replace it with repl. Levee will look for
patt once on each line and replace it with repl. The delimiter
may be any ascii character.

The pattern is a regular expression, just like a search pattern.

You may include parts of the pattern in the replacement string;
A '&' in the replacement pattern copies in the whole source pattern,
so if you do a 'sub/this/& and that/g', every instance of 'this'
will be replaced with 'this and that'.  Also, you may pull parts of
the pattern out by using the \\( and \\) argument meta-characters.
Arguments gotten by \\( & \\) are put into the replacement string
everywhere you do a \\1..\\9 [ \\1 is the first argument you set up
with \\( & \\) ]. So, if you want to reverse the order of two substrings,
you can do 'sub/\\(string1\\)\\(string2\\)/\\2\\1/'.

substitute& redoes the last substitution.

Options:
.TP
.B q,c
Before doing the substitute, display the affected
line and wait for you to type a character. If you
type 'y', it will do the substitution. 'q' aborts
the substitute,  'a'  does the rest of the change
without prompting, and 'n' does not do it.
.TP
.B p
Print the affected lines after the change.
.TP
.B g
Do the change globally. That is, do it for every
occurence  of patt on a  line,  rather than just
once.
.PP

.TP
.B undo
Undo the last modification to the file (except :edit, :next, :rm,
or :write.) You can only undo the last change to a file -- undo counts
as a change. :undo followed by :undo does nothing to the file.

.TP
.BI unmap (key)
Undefine a macro (see map).

.TP
.BI visual [list]
If you entered command mode by "Q" or "execmode", return to
visual mode.  If you provide an argument list, it also does a
`:next' on that list.

.TP
.B version
Show which version of levee this is.

.TP
.IB (.,.) "write \fI[file]"
Write lines to a file. If you write the everything to 'file',
the filename is set to 'file', and if you do not specify a file,
Levee will write to the filename.

.TP
.IB (.,.) "wq \fI[file]"
 Write to a file, then quit.

.TP
.IB (.,.) yank
Yank lines from the file into the yank buffer, for later
putback with "put".

.TP
.B xit[!]
Write changes to the current file, then exit. If there are
more files in the arglist, use "xit!"

.TP
.B ![command]
Execute command.

Example:

.RS
!ls    => does a 'ls'.
.RE

This command is available only under GEMDOS, MSDOS, RMX, and
Unix.

.TP
.B ($)=
Give the line number of the addressed line. /end/= gives you
the line number of the next line with a 'end' on it.


.SH "VISUAL MODE COMMANDS"
Visual mode commands move you around  and modify the file.
There are movement commands to move the cursor by a variety of
objects.

In the description,  a (#) means a optional  count.  If a
command has a optional count,  it will tell you what the count
does in parenthesis.  A (*) means that the command can be used
in the delete, yank, and change commands.

Counts are made up by  entering digits.  If you type '45',
the count will be set to 45. To cancel a count, type ESC.

This section discusses 'whitespace' occasionally.
Whitespace is tabs, spaces, and end of line.

.SS "How the display works"

Characters  are  displayed  on  the  screen  as  you would
expect,  except that  nonprinting characters are  shown as ^x,
and tabs  expand to  spaces ( unless you  set the option list,
then they show as ^I.)  When sitting on a control character or
tab, the cursor is placed on the FIRST character displayed. If
you move the cursor to  any other part of them ( via j or k --
see below), any changes will start at the next character.
 
Levee  does  not  display a end of  file marker, but lines
past the end of the file are denoted by ~ lines.

If list is  set,  tabs  display as ^I, and the end of line
displays as $.

If a  line is too long for the screen,  it will  just disappear off the end of the screen.

Levee will handle any screen resolution and any monospaced
font you hand it ( if you are running in low resolution, Levee
will give you a 25x40 window, for example.)

.SS "Visual mode commands"
.TP
.B ^A
Show a debugging message at the bottom of the screen. This is not at
all useful unless you are debugging the editor. Ignore it.

.TP
.B (#)^D
Scroll the screen down a half screen. If a count is specified, scroll
down the specified number of lines.

.TP
.B ^E
Scroll down 1 line (shorthand for 1^D )

.TP
.B ^G
Show file statistics. Exactly like ':file'.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)^H
Move the cursor left one (count) chars.

.TP
.B ^I
Redraw the screen.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)^J
Move down one (count) lines. When you use ^J and ^K (below) to move
up or down lines, the cursor will remain in the same column, even if
it is in the middle of a tabstop or past the end of a line.

.TP
.IB (*)  (#)^K
Move up one (count) lines.
.TP
.IB (*)  (#)^L
Move right one (count) characters.
.TP
.IB (*)  (#)^M
Move to the first nonwhite space on the next line. If a count is specified,
move to the first nonwhite count lines down.
.TP
.B (#)^U
Scroll the screen up a half page. If a count is specified, scroll up
count lines.

.TP
.B ^Y
Scroll the screen up 1 line (shorthand for 1^U.)

.TP
.B (#)a
Insert text AFTER the cursor. If you give a count, the insertion will
be repeated count times ( 40i-ESC will give you a line of 40 dashes).

The commands in insert mode are the same for visual and command mode.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)b
Move to the beginning of the last word (the count'th word back).
A word is a collection of alphanumeric characters (a-z0-9$_#) or
any other nonwhite character (i.e. anything but space, tab, eoln).

.TP
.B c
Change a object. Change deletes an object, then enters insert mode without
redrawing the screen. When you tell it the object to be changed, Levee
puts a '$' on the last character of the object. You cannot change
backwards.

The object may be any visual mode command marked with a '(*) '. For
example, 'c4l' will change the next 4 characters on the line to something
else. (4cl does the same thing -- 4c4l changes the next 16 characters on
this line.)

 'cc' will change whole lines.

When changing, deleting, or yanking a object, it will be placed into
a yank buffer, where it can be retrieved by the 'p' or 'P' commands.

.TP
.B (#)d
Delete an object. Like 'cc', 'dd' affects whole lines.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)e
Move to the end of the current word.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)f(x)
Find the next (count'th) occurance of a character on the current line.
For example, if the cursor is sitting on the first character of the
line 'abcdef', typing "ff" will put the cursor on the 'f'.

.TP
.B g
Move to the start of the file.  Shorthand for 1G. (See below for G.)

.TP
.IB (*) (#)h
Move left one (count) characters. Exactly like ^H.

.TP
.B (#)i
Start inserting characters at the cursor. If you specify a count,
the insertion will be duplicated count times.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)j
Move down one (count) lines. Exactly like ^J.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)k
Move up one (count) lines. Exactly like ^K.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)l
Move right one (count) character. Exactly like ^L.

.TP
.B m(x)
Set the marker (x). There are 26 markers available (a-z). You may
move to a marker by use of the ' or ` commands.

.TP
.IB (*) n
Find the next occurance of a search pattern. When you do a search with
a / or ? command, Levee will remember the pattern and the direction you
searched in. 'n' will search in the same direction for the pattern, 'N'
searches in the opposite direction.

.TP
.B o
Open a line below the current line for insertion.

.TP
.B p
Put yanked/deleted text back after the cursor. Text is yanked
by the delete (d,x,X,D), change (c,C,s,S), and yank (y,Y) commands.

.TP
.B (#)r(x)
Replace characters (up to end of line) with (x). '4ra' will change the
next 4 characters after the cursor into 'aaaa'.

.TP
.B (#)s
change one (count) characters. Shorthand for (#)cl.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)t(x)
Move up to a character on the current line. If you are on the first
character of the line 'abcdef' and you type 'tf', you will end up sitting
on the 'e'.

.TP
.B u
Undo last modification. You can undo ANY modification command except
:edit, :next, :rm, or :write. (Just like :undo).

.TP
.IB (*) (#)v
Move back to the very end of the previous (count'th) word.
See 'b' for the definition of a word.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)w
Move up to the very beginning of the next (count'th) word.

.TP
.B (#)x
Delete one (count) characters forward. Shorthand for (#)dl.

.TP
.B y
Yank an object for later use by put. 'yy' yanks whole lines.

.TP
.B A
Append text at the end of the line. Shorthand for $a.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)B
Move to the beginning of the current word. Exactly like 'b'.

.B NOTE:
this is incorrect. the capitalized word movement commands should,
and will in the future, be used for movement by space-delimited words.

.TP
.B C
Change to the end of the line. Shorthand for c$.

.TP
.B D
Delete to the end of the line. Shorthand for d$.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)F(x)
Move to the first (count'th) previous occurance of a character on the
current line. If you are sitting at the end of the line 'abcdef', typing
"Fa" will move you back to the 'a' at the start of the line.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)G
Goto line. If you specify a count, Levee will move to that line, and if
there is no count, Levee moves to the absolute end of the file.

To get to the start of the file, type "1G". To the end, just "G". As a
convenience, "g" also moves to the start of the file.

.TP
.IB (*) H
Move to the first nonwhite character at the top of the screen.

.TP
.B I
Insert at the end of the current line. Shorthand for $i.

.TP
.B  (#)J
Join two (count+1) lines together. Joining appends the second line at
the end of the first, putting a space between them. If the first line
ends in whitespace, Levee will not put in a space.

.TP
.IB (*) L
Move to the last nonwhite character on the last line of the screen.

.TP
.IB (*)  M
Move to the first nonwhite character in the middle of the screen.

.TP
.B O
Open a line above the current line. Otherwise works just like 'o'.

.TP
.B P
Put back the yank buffer at the cursor. Otherwise works just like 'p'.

.TP
.B Q
Enter and remain in command mode. Just like the command :exec. To get
back to visual mode, you must enter the command ':visual'.

.TP
.B  R
Replace mode. A limited subset of insert mode that overwrites characters
up to end of line. All of the normal insert mode commands apply.
If you overwrite a character, then back over it with ^H,^U, or ^W, it
will reappear after you exit Replace mode.

Escape exits replace mode.

.B NOTE:
due to a bug, entering a <return> in Replace mode will drop you
back into visual mode with an error. The replacements you have made
will remain.

.TP
.B S
Change characters backwards. Shorthand for (#)ch.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)T(x)
Move back to character on current line. If you are on the last character
of the line 'abcdef', typing "Ta" will move you back to the 'b'.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)W
Move to end of word. Exactly like 'e'.

.TP
.B (#)X
Delete characters backwards. Shorthand for (#)dh.

.TP
.B Y
Yank to end of line. Shorthand for y$.

.TP
.B ZZ
Write changes to current file and exit if last file in arglist.
Exactly like :xit.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)$
Move to end of line. If you give a count, move to the end of the (count-1)
line down (so 2$ moves you to the end of the next line.).

.TP
.B 0
Move to the beginning of the current line.  Shorthand for 0|.

.TP
.B (#)!
Pipe an object through an external program. Like 'cc', '!!' affects whole lines.

.TP
.IB (*) %
Find matching bracket, parenthesis, or squiggly bracket. If you are not
sitting on a '[]{}()', Levee will search forward for one of them on the
current line, then match whatever it finds.

.TP
.B [space]
Move to the first nonwhite character on the current line.

.TP
.B &
Redo last substitution command.

.TP
.IB (*) (#){
Move to the beginning of the count'th paragraph back. A paragraph is
delimited by a blank line.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)}
Move to the end of the count'th paragraph forward.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)(
Move to the beginning of the count'th sentence back. A sentence is
delimited by a ., a !, or a ? followed by a space, a tab, or end of line.

.TP
.IB (*) (#))
Move to the end of the count'th sentence forward.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)-
Move to the (count'th) previous line, first nonwhite.

.TP
.IB (*) (#)+
Move to the (count'th) next line, first nonwhite.

.TP
.B  (#)~
Change the case of the next count characters. Upper case becomes lowercase,
lowercase becomes uppercase.

.TP
.IB (*) `(x)
Move to the exact position of mark (x). There is a special mark for some
of the visual mode movement commands -- '' will move you to where you
were before the last (,),',`,G,/,?,n,N command.

.TP
.B :
Execute one command mode command. When the command is done, it will return
to visual mode if it produces one line of output, but if it scrolls the
screen, Levee will prompt [more] before returning to visual mode. If you
type a : in response to the [more] prompt, Levee will remain in command
mode for one more command.

.TP
.B  (#)<(#)
Shift one (count) objects left. If you specify a second count, Levee will
shift the object left that many columns -- if you do not, they will be
shifted shiftwidth columns.

This is a nondestructive shift. If the shift would carry past the left
margin, the objects will be moved up to the left margin but no farther.

Like the other object movement commands, '<<' will affect whole lines.

.TP
.B (#)>(#)
Shift one (count) objects right. Just like <, except it will not shift
objects past the right margin of the screen. If you do shift an object
past the right margin of the screen, all of its indent will be removed
and it will end up by the left margin.

.TP
.B \.
Repeat last modification command. (except undo)

.TP
.IB (*) ?
Search for pattern backwards. Escape aborts the search pattern, and a
empty pattern means search for the last pattern again.

.TP
.IB (*) /
Search for pattern forwards. Otherwise like ?.

.TP
.B (#)|
Move to specified column. If you don't have a count, move to column 0.

.SH "REGULAR EXPRESSIONS"

Levee gives  special meanings to  some characters during
a pattern match.  The character "." will match any one char,
the character "*" will match zero or  more occurances of the
previous char ( so, a* will match 'a','aa','aaa', etc, or it
will match nothing at all). If a pattern begins with "^", it
will  only match  at the  beginning of a line,  and patterns
ending with a "$" will only match at the end of a line.

Brackets ('[]') have special meaning as well.  They mean
match any one of the characters inside the brackets. '[abc]'
will  match  'a', 'b', or 'c'.  You may  specify  a range of
characters inside brackets by using a dash (-). '[a-z]' will
match any lowercase alphabetic character.  If ^ is the first
character  in  the  bracket,  it means match  any  character
except those in the brackets.   '[^abc]' will match anything
except 'a','b', or 'c'.

Backslash takes away  special  meaning  for these chars,
but '\\t' specifies  a  tab,  and \\( & \\)  delimit  arguments
inside a pattern (used only by :substitute.)    The patterns
\\< and \\> have special  meaning,  too;  they match the start
and end of alpha-numeric tokens.

If you  turn off  the editor variable  'magic',  none of
the above  characters will  have special  meaning  inside of
a pattern (see 'set').

Some example patterns:

.TP
.B ^end$
Find a line that is just 'end'.
.TP
.B [Ee][Nn][Dd]
Find a 'end', ignoring case.
.TP
.B [A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9]*
Find the next identifier.
.TP
.B (\\*.*\\*)
Find the next one-line pascal comment.
.TP
.B \<the\>
Find the next occurance of `the'.


.SH LIMITATIONS
Levee can only edit files up to 256000 characters long. ^M is used
as its internal line separator, so inserting ^M will have interesting
consequences.

.SH BUGS
Probably infinite.

.SH AUTHOR
.B "David L. Parsons"
.I (orc@pell.portland.or.us)
.br
Testing, suggestions, and impractical design goals by:
Jim Bolland. John Tainter. John Plocher.

.SH COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1982-2015 David L. Parsons
.br
All rights reserved.
.br

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, without or
without modification, are permitted provided that the above
copyright notice and this paragraph are duplicated in all such
forms and that any documentation, advertising materials, and
other materials related to such distribution and use acknowledge
that the software was developed by David L. Parsons (orc@pell.portland.or.us).
My name may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
from this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE.
